Works start to reinstate Cedar Valley roadway, St. Thomas

Date Published: 
04 Dec 2020

The National Works Agency (NWA) is notifying the motoring public that works to complete a retaining wall structure at the site of a breakaway along the Trinityville to Cedar Valley roadway in St. Thomas has started.

 

According to NWA Communication and Customer Services Manager, Stephen Shaw, the activities should be sufficiently completed by mid-December which will allow motor vehicles to safely access the area once again. The wall construction works, he explains, was already included in the programme of works being implemented under the Southern Coastal Highway Improvement Project (SCHIP).

 

The affected area, he explains, is perennially waterlogged. The works involve properly collecting and channeling water from a number of underground sources to a tributary of the Yallahs River to minimize the impact on the roadway. Forty-five meters of mass concrete masonry retaining wall as well as a dewatering well is being built at the location. Revetment protection works will also be done.

 

While pedestrian traffic is being accommodated along an area adjacent to the site, the option of using the alternate route via Yallahs to Llandewey through to Windsor Forest is available for motorists travelling beyond the point of the breakaway.

 

Similar complex wall construction works are also taking place at a second location in Cedar Valley and at New Monkland along the twelve kilometer-long Georgia to Cedar Valley leg of the (SCHIP) project.

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